A runway lighting fixture of the type normally permanently installed at an aircraft installation such as an airport to provide visible light signals to an aircraft, the fixture having an internal, non-visible light source such as an infrared lamp capable of being activated to provide a non-visible light signal to an aircraft specially equipped to see such non-visible signals. An airport normally having arrays of permanent visibly-lighted fixtures can be equipped for long-term or permanent covert operations capability by installing covert, non-visibly-lighted fixtures in place of visibly-lighted fixtures. In a preferred form the covert fixtures are capable of being both visibly and non-visibly lighted to allow normal appearing non-covert operations at the airport, and unobtrusive covert operations whenever needed.
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19. A covert runway lighting fixture for permanent installation at an aircraft landing installation having visible runway lighting fixtures electrically interconnected to control means remote from said fixtures, comprising a non-visible light source in the fixture adapted to be electrically interconnected to said visible runway lighting fixtures and said control means and a fixture housing externally similar to a visible runway lighting fixture housing lighting said non-visible light source being selectively activated by said control means.
1. In a permanently installed runway lighting fixture at an aircraft landing installation comprising a permanently installed array of visible-lighting fixtures comprising visible light sources electrically interconnected to said control means remote from said fixtures and normally used to provide non-covert visible lighting to non-covert air traffic, the improvement comprising:
a non-visible light source mounted in the fixture and electrically interconnected to said array of visible lighting fixtures and said control means and capable of being selectively activated by said control means to provide covert lighting for covert air operations using the permanently installed fixture in the permanently installed array.
12. A method for covertly lighting an aircraft installation having a plurality of permanently installed, non-covert runway lighting fixtures electrically interconnected to control means remote from said fixtures and producing visible, non-covert light signals to guide aircraft, comprising the following steps:
installing a plurality of covert runway lighting fixtures that appear to be non-covert fixtures permanently installed at the aircraft installation and electrically interconnected to said non-covert runway lighting fixtures and said control means, the covert runway lighting fixtures capable of producing a non-visible, covert light signal to guide aircraft equipped to see the covert light signal, and selectively activating the covert runway lighting fixtures by use of said control means.
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The present invention is in the field of airport runway lighting.
Military and other covert air operations often desire or require non-visible runway lighting markers for nighttime operations. This has been achieved with small, man-portable, battery-operated lights that emit infrared light visible only to pilots or ground personnel wearing special goggles or in specially equipped aircraft. These lights are temporarily deployed on existing airstrips and runways, or are scattered about a likely spot to create a makeshift airway, drop zone or landing zone for a few hours.
While useful in the field, these deployable covert lights are less useful for fixed, permanent runway installations such as airports where several hours may be needed to set them up, where it is not desirable for the local civilian air traffic and ground personnel to see the deployed lights (including their setup), and where several hours may be needed to retrieve them. These deployable lights are also not suitable for extended, sophisticated, large-scale air operations where aircraft need to use them for sustained periods of time or spot them many miles away, and where detailed, large-scale, easily-adjusted covert lighting patterns may be needed around the airport.
The present invention is an apparatus and method for converting a fixed runway installation's visible runway light fixtures to include at least some covert-capable fixtures that emit a non-visible light signal, such that normal visible-light-using air traffic remains unaffected by and unaware of the covert capability. Aircraft and ground personnel equipped to see the non-visible light signals can accordingly operate and use the runway installation covertly, with or without the visible lights in operation, and without the need to wait for a temporary and obtrusive deployment of covert lights.
By runway installation is meant permanent installations that have an essentially permanently-installed array of visible runway and related light fixtures, such as civilian and military airport runways, aircraft carrier runways and helipads, and fixed drop zones used for training and emergency purposes at military and civilian airports. By runway light fixtures is meant fixtures both on and associated with runways, taxiways, drop zones, helipads and the like, useful in assisting aircraft to spot, approach, drop cargo, land and/or take off. Such fixtures include but are not limited to runway centerline lights, edge lights, threshold lights, taxiway lights, approach angle indicator lights, fixed drop zone marker lights, windspeed indicator bars, and wind direction beacons.
In a first aspect of the invention, a runway light fixture is provided with an infrared or similar non-visible light source (for example, non-visible spectrum laser light, non-visible ultraviolet light, or a controllable non-visible thermal source capable of being viewed with a passive infrared viewer) capable of being seen only by specially equipped aircraft and personnel. In a preferred form, a visible light fixture of known, ordinary-looking type is modified by replacing a visible light source inside the fixture with a non-visible light source, or replacing the fixture with the same or a similar fixture having both visible and non-visible light sources, such that the visible and non-visible light sources can be operated simultaneously or independently, depending on the lighting needs of the air traffic.
In a second aspect of the invention, some or all of the fixtures at an installation can be replaced or modified, as needed. The modified or replaced fixtures can preferably operate on the normal lighting control and power system already in place at the airport, such that maintenance personnel, air control personnel, or even the crew of an approaching aircraft can enable non-visible, covert operations with a direct or remote signal. Alternately, covert-capable fixtures can be made to have their non-visible lights activated individually and/or to use different power sources.
Although it is preferred to provide fixtures each capable of both visible and non-visible lighting, it is also possible to switch or complement one or more visible light fixtures with a corresponding number of non-visible-only light fixtures at the landing installation, such that some of the runway fixtures are purely visible fixtures and some are purely covert fixtures capable of providing non-visible light signals to an aircraft. And although most installations will be retrofits or replacements of existing visible lighting fixtures, new runway construction can be originally provided with covert dual- and/or single-mode fixtures.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon further reading of the specification, in light of the accompanying drawings.
Referring first to
Runway 12 is typically provided with several different types of light fixture, set in different arrays for different purposes. In the illustrated example, the runway centerline 12a is marked at intervals with runway centerline lights 20 of known type, embedded flush or nearly so with the paved surface of the runway and emitting light patterns 21 aligned with the centerline in known fashion. Centerline lights 20 can vary in their construction, are available from many commercial sources, and may be unidirectional for single-direction runways or (as illustrated in
The side edges 12b of the runway are marked along their length in conventional fashion with runway edge lights 22 of known type, similar to centerline lights 20 but often having two diverging or differently-angled lamps, one throwing a light pattern 23a essentially parallel to or only slightly angled in toward the runway edge, and one throwing a more strongly angled or “toed-in” light pattern 23b toward the runway centerline. Runway edge lights 22 are often mounted low or nearly flush to the ground like centerline lights 20, and may be very similar in appearance and function, such that it is known to use the same type of light fixture both for centerline and edge lighting. Runway edge lights 22, however, often have a deeper mounting base or anchor (not shown, see
The approach end 12c of runway 12 is often marked by a geometric pattern of approach lights 24, for example in a triangle or arrowhead pattern similar to that shown in
The actual threshold 12c of the paved runway 12 is often separately lit, for example by a straight row of vertical post-mounted type threshold lights 26 of known type, often with a multi-directional light pattern to both light the edge of the pavement (27a) and to be seen by an approaching aircraft (27b) to clearly mark the transition from approach lights 24 to the actual pavement threshold.
The end 12d of the runway, where the pavement runs out, will typically be marked with its own array of runway end indicator lights 28, which again may be post-mounted lights similar to threshold lights 26.
An aircraft's angle of approach may also be assisted with precision approach path indicator or “PAPI” lights 30, usually raised, multi-lamp, sometimes multi-color fixtures with the respective angles of the lamps themselves set such that an over/under or on/off color or light pattern 31 discernible to the approaching aircraft can be gauged for a go or no-go landing decision (for example, red-over-white OK to land, white-over-red go around again).
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art of runway lighting that many variations on runway lighting patterns exist, that different types of fixture are often mixed and matched in custom arrays, that fixtures intended for one purpose (centerline lighting) may find use at a particular runway installation for a different purpose, and that other known types of runway light fixtures that have not been specifically named above are similar or equivalent to those shown herein for purpose of illustration.
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Some of the advantages of the invention include the ability to convert an airport to covert runway lighting capability that can be activated, adjusted, and deactivated as quickly and conveniently as the normal visible runway lighting; that is unobtrusive to normal air and ground personnel during the daytime, and which can function in an essentially normal visible mode at night, when desired; that has sufficient power for extended covert use and for the non-visible lighting to be seen from long distances; and that has sufficiently detailed non-visible lighting around the runway to function as an essentially normal runway for night-vision-equipped pilots and ground crews.
It will further be appreciated that modification or replacement of existing visible-light-only fixtures can be accomplished quickly and without attracting attention, appearing, for example, as routine maintenance typical with runway lighting fixtures. This may be especially important in sensitive areas or countries, where it is not desirable for locals to know about the runway's covert capabilities. And a runway or installation so equipped can be quickly denied to or hidden from an enemy by turning off the visible lights in known manner while enabling just the non-visible lights.
FIGS. 4 and 4A–4C illustrate one of the edge runway lighting fixtures 122 from
In the illustrated embodiment, fixture 122 is illustrated as having a pair of essentially unidirectional windows to make it a one-way fixture, but it is known to provide such fixtures with opposite-facing windows (and associated lights or lamps) as shown in phantom for two-way use.
The non-visible (infrared) lamp assembly 242 in fixture 222 is connected through its PC board 242b by wiring 242c to power terminals 250, to use the same electrical power supplied to the incandescent/quartz lamp assembly. It may be desirable for the infrared assembly 242 to use the same power supply from terminals 250, but a different voltage or even a different type of current (for example, direct current) to light the LED bulbs. For this purpose a transformer or converter of known type (not shown) can be connected between board 242b and terminals 250 in known fashion. It may be desirable for the infrared lamp assembly 242 to have its own independent power supply, for example a separate external conduit or a manually or remotely activated internal battery in the fixture as primary or backup power, but piggybacking the infrared assembly to the same power supply used by the standard incandescent lamp assembly and fixture is preferred.
Although the foregoing embodiments show separate windows or lenses for each lamp assembly, it is also possible to place both a visible and an infrared lamp assembly in a runway lighting fixture to shine through a common lens or window. Operation can then be one at a time, or in some cases simultaneously, where, for example, a different signal or intensity or pattern of infrared light would be visible to an infrared-equipped covert pilot while the normal visible signal remained available to normal pilots.
The foregoing examples of the invention are preferred and alternate embodiments for purpose of explanation. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the invention can be implemented in ways other than these specific examples without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims, now that we have disclosed the invention with these examples.
Wallace, Roger S., Wallace, Renae L.
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